Killer storms in the mid-West!

   / Killer storms in the mid-West! #21  
My sincere best wishes to all the victims and their Families that have suffered as a result of these storms.

X2 - Praying that todays storms do not aggrevate thoose recovering or create more greif for others. In MI we are only looking at 50-60 MPH straight line winds and thunderstorms. Going SE of us.
 
   / Killer storms in the mid-West!
  • Thread Starter
#22  
Wow, you guys in the East are taking a beating, I hope everyone fares well.

At one time today, they where saying there where 2 dozen tornadoes on the ground at the same time spread out over several states, I hope this isnt going to be the weather trend for this Spring.
 
   / Killer storms in the mid-West! #23  
The ones that hit Illinois and Indiana so bad yesterday just brushed us with several tornadoes spotted, but no significant damage other than some missing shingles, I feel so sorry for those who bore the brunt of those storms.
 
   / Killer storms in the mid-West!
  • Thread Starter
#24  
The ones that hit Illinois and Indiana so bad yesterday just brushed us with several tornadoes spotted, but no significant damage other than some missing shingles, I feel so sorry for those who bore the brunt of those storms.

You got that right! Now the worst are appears to be in the Southeast.

Sure adding to my intentions of putting in a storm shelter of some kind. Odds are I wont have a tornado, but the odds where the same for the 37 folks that died in yesterdays storms too.
 
   / Killer storms in the mid-West! #25  
You got that right! Now the worst are appears to be in the Southeast.

Sure adding to my intentions of putting in a storm shelter of some kind. Odds are I wont have a tornado, but the odds where the same for the 37 folks that died in yesterdays storms too.

My brother has an underground prefabbed that he buried in his back yard. It is big enough for him and my other brother and family who lives right by him. When we built our present house, we put a basement in with some pretty secure areas braced by steel poles and laminated overhead beams. We have been down there quite a bit the last few days.
 
   / Killer storms in the mid-West! #26  
Global Warming.

We have to pull together to help those injured and dealing with property loss and destruction from these oversized and frequent storms.
 
   / Killer storms in the mid-West! #27  
Once the search and recovery is over, people hit by the storm are still going to need help. FEMA will pay to haul off the debris but they will only pick up from the road. If the debris is a mile it has to be moved to the curb.

Many families are going to want and NEED to pick through the debris to find things that are important to them. Quite a bit can be salvaged if people help out. The victims are overwhelmed from the start and can stay that way for weeks because of the workload, property and human losses.

If you are near where the storms hit, go help out. If you can trailer your tractor to a work site it will be very helpful. If it is only you and some hand tools, go.

I have helped clean up from Hurricane Floyd and the tornado outbreak we had last spring. For the victims, seeing total strangers appearing unexpectedly and out of nowhere is a huge help to them physically and, most importantly, mentally.

The site I worked at last year was in the middle of nowhere. There were four trailers clustered together about 1/4 mile apart. The tornado had the perfect path to take out all four. If the tornado had been a 1/4 mile to the east or west it would have miss those trailers. The tornado killed two people in those four trailers. One trailer was picked up, flown across a road, and dumped into a field. It looked like a pile of trash, not someones house.

One of the people killed was the aunt of a coworker. We went one day to help clean up. I took a long pry bar, wheel barrow, chainsaw along with other tools. These three really came in handy. Local people drove a couple tractors to the destruction and help clear out debris and move it to the road. Once we had moved stuff by hand, a JD CUT pulled out the frame of one of the trailers which then were cut up by a torch another guy had brought. You really need gloves, long pants, and boots that will stop a stepped on nail from getting to your foot. There are nails in the debris like you cannot believe. We only had one guy "hurt" which greatly surprised me and he was only scratched.

There were quite a few old guys working the site. Every little bit helped. The family wanted us to find photo albums and other things that were important to them along with cleaning up. Just wading in the mess and moving a bit of this and that was helpful. I was surprised at how much work we got done that day with maybe 10-15 people on site. There was a guy organizing things from a church in VA that was going to arrive on the weekend. The church came and REALLY helped clean up the debris that had blown into the woods and all over the fields.

I found a single photo that was from one of the trailers that was across the street. The photo was hundreds of yards from the trailer and sitting in a field. I knew the photo was not from the house we were working on so I walked over to a group working on one of the other trailers to see if they knew who the photo belong too. They got all chocked up because that photo was of a family member who was gone and this was one of the few reminders they had for that person.

The clean up will last for months. Help out when you can, if you can. The simple act of helping will be very helpful to the victims and you will be a better person for helping.

Later,
Dan
 
   / Killer storms in the mid-West! #28  
Once the search and recovery is over, people hit by the storm are still going to need help. FEMA will pay to haul off the debris but they will only pick up from the road. If the debris is a mile it has to be moved to the curb.

Many families are going to want and NEED to pick through the debris to find things that are important to them. Quite a bit can be salvaged if people help out. The victims are overwhelmed from the start and can stay that way for weeks because of the workload, property and human losses.

If you are near where the storms hit, go help out. If you can trailer your tractor to a work site it will be very helpful. If it is only you and some hand tools, go.

I have helped clean up from Hurricane Floyd and the tornado outbreak we had last spring. For the victims, seeing total strangers appearing unexpectedly and out of nowhere is a huge help to them physically and, most importantly, mentally.

The site I worked at last year was in the middle of nowhere. There were four trailers clustered together about 1/4 mile apart. The tornado had the perfect path to take out all four. If the tornado had been a 1/4 mile to the east or west it would have miss those trailers. The tornado killed two people in those four trailers. One trailer was picked up, flown across a road, and dumped into a field. It looked like a pile of trash, not someones house.

One of the people killed was the aunt of a coworker. We went one day to help clean up. I took a long pry bar, wheel barrow, chainsaw along with other tools. These three really came in handy. Local people drove a couple tractors to the destruction and help clear out debris and move it to the road. Once we had moved stuff by hand, a JD CUT pulled out the frame of one of the trailers which then were cut up by a torch another guy had brought. You really need gloves, long pants, and boots that will stop a stepped on nail from getting to your foot. There are nails in the debris like you cannot believe. We only had one guy "hurt" which greatly surprised me and he was only scratched.

There were quite a few old guys working the site. Every little bit helped. The family wanted us to find photo albums and other things that were important to them along with cleaning up. Just wading in the mess and moving a bit of this and that was helpful. I was surprised at how much work we got done that day with maybe 10-15 people on site. There was a guy organizing things from a church in VA that was going to arrive on the weekend. The church came and REALLY helped clean up the debris that had blown into the woods and all over the fields.

I found a single photo that was from one of the trailers that was across the street. The photo was hundreds of yards from the trailer and sitting in a field. I knew the photo was not from the house we were working on so I walked over to a group working on one of the other trailers to see if they knew who the photo belong too. They got all chocked up because that photo was of a family member who was gone and this was one of the few reminders they had for that person.

The clean up will last for months. Help out when you can, if you can. The simple act of helping will be very helpful to the victims and you will be a better person for helping.

Later,
Dan

:thumbsup::thumbsup:
 
   / Killer storms in the mid-West! #29  
Tornado passed by my house 3 miles to the north. ...

That was far closer than I like. A weather radio...has been ordered.

For those of you considering a weather radio...I've had a Sangeon radio for about a year now. The audible alarms will wake you at night (I keep mine on the headboard of the bed).

[ame="http://www.amazon.com/Sangean-CL-100-Certified-S-A-M-E-Weather/dp/B003QHXZM4/ref=sr_1_7?ie=UTF8&qid=1330877322&sr=8-7"]Amazon.com: Sangean CL-100 Table Top Public Alert Certified S.A.M.E. Weather Hazard Alert Radio: Electronics[/ame]


I can definitely recommend this one...
 
   / Killer storms in the mid-West! #30  
We live about 50 miles from the tornado area in Indiana. Not much damage here, just a few trees done. But today, Monday 3/5 They woke up to 2 inches of snow on the ground. Just what they didn't need.

They interviewed a farmer down there this morning on the news. His house was damaged, but standing. He had lost his barn, all his silos and some equip. The silos were strewn in his field a quarter of a mile away. Fortunately they had just sold the grain. The problem now is to clear the field for spring planting, but they would have to hand pick the field clean. No one want to jeopardize there tractor tires to all the nails and other debris in the fields.
 

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